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THE GREEN DEAL AND ECO - WRITTEN MINISTERIAL STATEMENT
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
The Green Deal and ECO (Energy Company Obligation) -
Written Ministerial Statement
11 June 2012
Edward Davey, Secretary of State for Energy and Climate
Change
The statement has now been released, and is available online
here.
DECC has also issues a press release on "next steps for Green
Deal", which is available
here.
Today my Department is publishing the Government response to the
Green Deal and ECO consultation ahead of the introduction of the
Green Deal this Autumn.
Having considered over 600 written responses from a variety of
organisations and individuals, I would like to thank all those who
submitted a formal response, or participated through the various
activities held during the consultation. Feedback from the
consultation directed our focus towards four key policy areas:
strengthening consumer protection, reducing industry burdens,
improving behind-the-scenes operations and revising ECO. I have
acted on these areas, and full details of the final policy are set
out in the Government response.
Following consultation, this week I am laying before Parliament
the key statutory instruments which establish the market framework
of the Green Deal and ECO, subject to the affirmative procedure. I
am laying these instruments alongside the final impact assessment,
which evaluates the net present value of the policies. My
Department has simultaneously published associated research which
informed our final conclusions. Later in June, I will lay before
Parliament a second tranche of more minor Green Deal statutory
instruments, subject to the negative procedure. I will also be
bringing forward the Green Deal Code of Practice and modifications
to energy licences and codes.
Having taken over this programme four months ago, I have spent
this time talking to stakeholders and understanding how to ensure
successful delivery. Mindful that we are creating the foundations
for a market that will run through to 2030, and in light of
representations I have received, the regulations I am laying today
provide for a carefully managed introduction of the Green
Deal starting this Autumn.
Subject to Parliamentary approval of the Green Deal legislation,
accredited certification bodies will be able to submit applications
to register with the Green Deal Registration and Oversight Body
from August. The certification bodies will then be able to register
those assessors and installers they have certified. Similarly,
potential Green Deal Providers will be able to apply for their
approval. This will allow participants time to seek formal
authorisation ahead of the introduction of the Green Deal framework
in the Autumn. It is important that the market will be able to test
systems properly during the first weeks following the introduction
of the Green Deal framework and ahead of the first fully completed
Green Deal plans in early 2013. In the meantime, the Energy Company
Obligation (ECO) legislation I have put before Parliament
today will ensure that a new ECO is established from October this
year. This will mean that an estimated £1.3 billion worth per annum
of energy efficiency and heating measures can be delivered across
Great Britain. This will be directed to vulnerable and lower-income
households, and carbon saving measures. The Government remains
absolutely committed to tackling fuel poverty.
An important aspect of preparations is training the workforce,
and I took an obligation in the Energy Act 2011 to report to
Parliament on what steps I have taken to encourage Green Deal
installation apprenticeships. On 8 March 2012, in co-operation with
Asset Skills and Construction Skills, I announced £3.5m to train up
to 1,000 Green Deal insulation installers, and 1,000 Green Deal
assessors to our new National Occupational Standard for Green Deal
assessment. This training will also include the validation of
existing installer training courses to meet the new Green Deal PAS
2030 requirements and the training of trainers to ensure quality
training courses are available. I welcome the wide support from
industry for this initiative and the huge level of interest
reported by the sector skills councils. We believe the Green Deal
has the potential to support up to 60,000 jobs in the insulation
sector alone, more than doubling the number of jobs in the sector,
and making a real contribution to green growth.
We will work with the insulation sector to explore the value of
a second tranche of funding for training later in the year to help
those moving from CERT and CESP and into related Green Deal
installations. In addition to this, my Department will continue to
work with employers and the sector skills councils to ensure that
the Government's wider Apprenticeship Frameworks support not only
the Green Deal, but also green and sustainable construction
more generally.
We have created a robust legal framework which enables a market
in energy efficiency to flourish. We are committed to ensuring the
interests of Green Deal providers and financiers remain protected
to maintain the security of Green Deal asset and thus secure the
lowest possible cost finance for consumers.
It is only sensible to keep regulations under review and, for
the sake of transparency, I will commit now to review these
regulations, in consultation with appropriate stakeholders, before
31 January 2018 and to publish the conclusions in a report. The
report will set out the objectives of these regulations and assess
the extent to which they were achieved, whether they remain
appropriate and, if so, the extent to which they could be achieved
with a system that imposes less regulation.